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Capsure review: a careful look at the UK supplements shop

Warm whimsical illustration of a kitchen table with unbranded supplement bottles, a mug, notebook, leaves and soft morning light, no logos or readable text

Visit the Capsure website

Capsure is a UK supplement shop selling vitamins, minerals, probiotics, healthy fats, herbal extracts and speciality capsules. On the surface, it is the sort of direct-to-brand health store that tries to make supplement buying feel tidy: clear categories, named ingredient forms, UK delivery information and plenty of reassurance around labelling.

This is also a category where Piglington puts the tiny reading spectacles on. Supplements are not ordinary lifestyle bits and bobs. Labels, claims, company details, returns rules and safety wording all matter, especially when a site is asking you to trust what goes into a capsule.

What Capsure sells

The range covers familiar everyday supplement territory: vitamin D3, B vitamins, magnesium citrate, zinc, omega-3 fish oil, probiotics, ashwagandha, maca root, CoQ10 and similar products. Capsure’s own site says it uses clearly labelled formulas, named ingredient forms and full excipient disclosure, with many products marked as vegetarian or vegan friendly where appropriate.

That is the part that looks shopper-friendly. Instead of only leaning on vague wellness language, Capsure gives fairly practical product names and separates the range into vitamins, minerals, amino acids, healthy fats, probiotics, herbs and speciality supplements. If you already know what you are looking for, the shop is easy enough to scan.

The important company-status check

There is one significant watch-out. Companies House lists Capsure Supplements Ltd, company number 15691053, as dissolved on 16 June 2026. The Capsure website footer still presents Capsure Supplements Ltd and the same company number at the time of this review.

That does not automatically tell you what is happening behind the scenes, and Gruntled is not making a legal claim about the trading position. It does mean shoppers should pause before ordering, check the current company details for themselves, and consider contacting Capsure directly if they need reassurance about fulfilment, refunds, warranties or who is responsible for the order.

What looks good

Capsure’s public pages do several useful things. The site gives a UK address, support email, phone and WhatsApp contact routes. It also says products are made with manufacturing partners operating under quality systems such as GMP and HACCP, and it includes sensible safety wording that food supplements are not intended to diagnose, treat, cure or prevent disease.

The product mix is also fairly focused. This is not a sprawling marketplace with every wellness fad stuffed into one digital cupboard. The best fit is probably a shopper who wants straightforward supplement staples and likes seeing exact ingredient forms, capsule counts and per-product information before deciding.

If you are comparing wellness brands, Gruntled has also reviewed Free Soul for women-focused protein and wellness products, INDI Supplements for plant-based gut-health products and ProVen Biotics for probiotic supplements.

Delivery and returns

Capsure’s delivery policy says UK orders of £50 or more qualify for free delivery, with Royal Mail Tracked 24 listed for lower-value orders. It also says orders placed by noon on a working day are typically dispatched the same working day, though next-day wording is a delivery aim rather than a guarantee.

That is useful, but do read the current delivery and returns pages before paying. Health products can be more awkward to return once opened, and the company-status question makes it even more sensible to keep screenshots or order records if you decide to proceed.

Who Capsure might suit

Capsure may suit shoppers who want a compact UK supplement range, prefer named ingredient forms over fuzzy label language, and are comfortable checking safety notes before buying. The strongest use case is a buyer who already knows the ingredient they want and is comparing dose, capsule count, delivery cost and support routes.

It is less suitable if you want a large established retailer, a brand with a long public trading history, or a purchase where you do not want to do any extra diligence. For those shoppers, a familiar pharmacy, supermarket, health-food chain or longer-established supplement brand may feel calmer.

What to check before ordering

Start with the basics: the current Companies House record, the website footer, the delivery and returns pages, and the exact seller name shown at checkout. If any of those details feel unclear, ask before ordering rather than after.

Then check the product itself. Look at the active ingredient amount, serving size, allergen notes, suitability labels, expiry expectations and whether the claims are modest and authorised rather than dramatic. Supplement shopping should feel boring in the best possible way: clear, precise and free of theatrical miracle-sprinkles.

Gruntled verdict

Capsure has some promising shopper-friendly touches: a focused supplement range, clear category structure, contact details, safety wording and delivery information. The site is much more useful than a vague wellness storefront with only glossy promises and very little substance.

But the Companies House dissolution record is too important to ignore. Until that is clearly explained or resolved, Capsure is a cautious-buyer choice rather than an easy recommendation. If you do order, do the checks first, keep records, and treat the purchase as one that deserves a little extra due diligence.

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